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The Chamber’s Tough Week

The US Chamber of Commerce can’t seem to catch a break. This was supposed to be the week that its new Campaign for Free Enterprise would lead Corporate America in an assault on Washington. Instead, the campaign’s message was drowned out by a barrage of revelations and new questions about who the nation’s largest business lobby really represents and how it adopted its right-wing agenda.

Yesterday alone, the Chamber came under withering fire. Writing in Slate, Eliot Spitzer urged institutional investors to pressure companies to quit the group, calling the Chamber “wrong on virtually every major public policy issue of the past decade.” A coalition of liberal NGOs launched StopTheChamber.com, a website that asks the Department of Justice to investigate the Chamber and demands that its president, Tom Donahue, be fired. And Change to Win, a large union-backed advocacy group, released a 55-page report on how Donohue “has compromised the credibility of the US Chamber of Commerce.”

Writing in the Washington Post this morning, Steven Pearlstein dismissed the Campaign for Free Enterprise as “nothing more than a desperate attempt to repackage the same old anti-tax, anti-regulation, anti-government rhetoric in hopes of derailing the major initiatives of the Obama administration and the Democratic Congress.”

All of this tops off a week in which Donohue was dogged in the press over the Chamber’s recent corporate defections and questionable internal governance. On Wednesday, when he appeared on MSNBC’s Morning Meeting to hype the Free Enterprise campaign, host Dylan Ratigan told him, “You talk nonsense.” The same day, the Chamber was forced to admit that its membership was 90 percent smaller than it had claimed after Mother Jones exposed the gimmick. We also reported that the Greater New York and San Francisco chambers are distancing themselves from the national group. (Also check out today’s post: The San Francisco Chamber is withdrawing from a US Chamber program that automatically enrolls some of its local members in national group, citing differences over climate policy).

Some respected corporate watchdogs long-ago gave up on the US Chamber. “[Tom Donohue] is a thug,” Nell Minow, head of the Corporate Library, told CFO Magazine in 2006. “He is big and loud and wrong. I am horrified at the way he has politicized the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, diminishing its credibility. . .He is not pro-business. He is pro-executive.”

Exploring exacly how pro-executive Donohue has been is the focus of the new Change to Win report, “Preaching Principle, Enabling Excess.” It argues that Donohue’s actions as a member of four scandal-ridden corporate boards show the need for the very financial and corporate governance regulations that the Chamber opposes. Since 1995, Donohue has earned millions as a board member of Qwest, Sunrise Senior Living, Union Pacific, and XM Satellite Radio. Among the report’s findings:

In 2002, Business Week named QWest to its list of eight “Worst Boards,” citing an expert who referred to the compensation committee on which Donohue served as “comatose.” The committee awarded QWest CEO Joe Nacchio (who was later jailed for insider trading) an $88 million pay package in 2001, one of the worst years in the company’s history. The same year, Qwest contributed $100,000 to the US Chamber. The Chamber later intervened in four separate legal cases on behalf of QWest, its founder Philip Anschutz, and/or Nacchio.

Without admitting liability, Sunrise Senior Living recently paid $13.5 million to settle shareholder litigation alleging that Sunrise officers and directors, including Donohue, received backdated options and traded their shares improperly. Between 1996 and 2005, Sunrise overstated its profits by 94 percent; it remains the target of an ongoing SEC investigation. Since 2007, the value of its stock has fallen 90 percent.

While Donohue served on the compensation committee of Union Pacific railroad, two UP executives raked in $1.7 million in payouts. After UP spun off the railroad’s trucking subsidiary, Overnite Transportation, the two executives named Donohue’s son to Overnite’s board of directors. Since 2004, UP has given the Chamber $700,000 and received substantial legal support.

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This feels like the most important fundraising drive since I've been CEO of Mother Jones, with staggeringly high stakes and so much uncertainty. In "News Is Just Like Waste Management," I try to unpack the reality we all face and how we can rise to the challenge. If you're able to, this is a critical moment to support Mother Jones’ nonprofit journalism: We need to raise $400,000 to help cover the vital reporting projects we have planned, and right now is no time to pull back.